(C:\ProgramData\opencpn\)opencpn.ini:
[Canvas]
CanvasConfig=0
* Close O. Set the CanvasConfig like above. Save the change. * Try:
Disable Options > Connections > “Output this port (as autopilot or NMEA repeater)”, particularly if it is doing nothing. Once I unchecked the issue goes away.
If the screen view is not in a place where charts are located then it will not show any chart keys. Try zooming out until piano keys show up.
Check your Options→Display→Advanced→“Chart Zoom/Scale weighting” For most vector chart the level would be “0”. If for example “5” the chart bar will be crowded and poor performance.
If you are actually asking why you don't see the chart cell adjacent to the one being displayed as well, it is because you have disabled quilting and are in single chart mode, to switch back, press “q” or use the hamburger icon in the lower right corner to invoke the chart canvas options menu and turn quilting back on.
Official charts that OpenCPN really can't display, with a latitude < 70 degrees north/south, are very few indeed. Really only a handful of legacy, Gnomonic, large scale charts. Charts with “UNKNOWN” or blank geodetic datum are best avoided, they may be dangerously inaccurate.
Anything in the SENC directory may be deleted while OpenCPN is stopped. The required files will be recreated as needed.
Turn quilting off (keyboard “q”) and you can zoom in or out as much as you like on a kap. I have a lot of overlapping charts including vector types and this is what I do, or as cagney says, the chart will change per zoom..the which is fine unless you want to stay on a particular chart. Another way would be to set up “Chart groups”…
- The behavior you see is expected for ENC charts. ENCs must be converted to internal SENC format before use for navigation. This takes a little bit of time, depending on your system capabilities. But it only has to be done once, and the converted SENCs are stored on your system for later use. - All ECS systems must convert ENCs to SENCs. Some take longer, (like OpenCPN), so that subsequent access is faster. Some convert faster, leaving more work to do at the time of actual chart display. Its a design decision. OpenCPN is optimized for speed in real use, not for speed in conversion.
- If I turn off quilting, I can select the individual maps just fine and zoom to any level on them. No amount of clicking/hiding the maps using the map bar at the bottom of the screen show the maps. Only a zoom allows them to be seen. This problem of disappearing maps happens all over the country at different zoom levels. - Answer: OpenGL is turned off. Without OpenGL, OpenCPN will not quilt Mercator and Transverse Mercator charts together. Try enabling OpenGL with Options (wrench tool icon)> Display> Advanced. Click on the box between “Graphics” and “Use Accelerated Graphics (OpenGL)” to put a checkmark in the box. - When OpenGL is enabled, OpenCPN will quilt Mercator and Transverse Mercator charts (and some other projections). - If “Texture Compression with Caching” is enabled under “OpenGL Options” there will be a delay before each chart is displayed for the first time. Subsequent display of the charts in the cache will be faster.
* Chances are the chart file is corrupted. * Note the name and number of the suspect chart and replace it with a fresh download. * Read the log file that may contain relevant information regarding the chart. * Sometimes the bad chart blocks OpenCPN from restarting. * Follow these instructions instead Troubleshoot Installation
Most users just want to get rid of the triangles, but please refer to the Quality of Data Documentation. - In Options > Charts > Vector Charts Tab when using Display Category “All”, Uncheck “Chart Information Objects” which hides the “U” symbols . - In Options > Charts > Vector Charts Tab for a finer grain control when using Display Category “Users Standard”, In the selection List Box, Uncheck “Quality of Data” which hides the “U” symbols. - If Quality of Data is checked, then the Shortcut Key “U” should toggle the “U” symbols on and off. See Keyboard Shortcut Also, when viewing ENC charts: - “U's” show up all over the charts - Text detail seems to be missing ..like buoy identification ..Bridge names and clearances etc… - Depth sounding seem to disappear zooming in and out.
Options > charts > Vector chart display tab, the 'user standard objects' section on the right side is disabled, items cannot be selected and the list cannot be scrolled. This is expected behavior.
Submarine cables are enabled by Hamburger→Display Category (All or UserStandard) and CheckBox “Anchoring Info.”
This isolated danger symbology is a part of the new ENC S57 presentation standard which OpenCPN complies with, get used to it. OR You can try to cover them with your depth setting. Look at the manual Vector Display Tab > Shallow, Safety & Deep Depths Safety Contour“, where you will find an example of just how depth is taken into account when displaying the magenta cross.
We have three setting for depths. They can be used in different ways but my boat (1.7 meters depth) and own philosophy gives this: * Shallow: 2 meters > Dark blue: keep out. * Deep: 3 meters Light blue; be careful. > Deeper water is white and safe. * Safety Depth: 5 meters to get highlighted soundings where I should not anchor due to weed/grass and to get rid of unimportant isolated dangers. The isolated danger indicators are shown or hid based on the safety depth/contour setting.
The traditional approach is to set the shallow contour to the “will run aground” depth, while the safety contour is calculated from your draft, safety margin, and height of tide. The deep water setting is then used however one likes, e.g. to mark areas shallow enough to anchor in.
Since the contours defined in the charts can be deeper than the value you select (the computer rounds up), it's possible that you sometimes will need to cross the safety contour. That's why soundings shallower than the value you enter will appear in black font, to make the hazardous ones more visible.
Thus, the simplest way to make the isolated danger marks disappear is to adjust the safety depth/contour to be deep enough.
You may wish to do this anyway, for example what I consider a safe depth within a bay is different from what I may consider at sea. The Potato Patch Shoal outside SF may be 7-9 meters deep, but that doesn't mean I consider it safe water.
It is the Isolated Danger Symbol, used to flag rocks or other hazards that are in otherwise “safe” waters as defined by your safety contour setting, but still have a depth less than the safety settings.
Go to Toolsbar > Options > Charts > Vector Chart Display. Change the settings:
Then your soundings on vector charts ar well visible and not faint up to 50.00 metres.
Chart text can quickly be hidden/shown by the key “T” but be sure to have correct text options checked, see below. Alternatively click on the “A+” Icon in the toolbar.
Options (gear) > Charts, Vector Chart Display and Uncheck: Important Text Only, De-Cluttered Text, Reduced Detail at Small Scale. Then using the chart menu at the lower right of the chart select “Display Category” to “All”. Then check all the boxes under the heading Vector Charts. You will have more text than you can read.
If still no joy, make sure you do not have the texts disabled in the configuration Options > Charts > Vector Display Tab. Also see Chart Text Settings.
Try the “t” short cut key which toggles text on/off. Same function as the “Show text” option at the Display menu, just without opening the menu.
There are three settings which control how much text (if any) is displayed on any vector chart and one more specific to CM93 charts.
Lower Right Hamburger Bar Checkbox “Show Text”
Options > Vector Chart Display. Checkbox “Show important text only”
Options > Advanced adjust Vector or CM93 details slidebars
Lights and Anchoring Info always start up activated, whereas Text and Soundings state is remembered. This is intentional. If there is no text or no soundings you will notice there is something missing. For lights and anchor it is not always easy to be aware if it is on or off, so for safety the default is on. If you like a default off, use “Users Standard” and switch the lights and seabad features off (but this is not a recommended state). See Keyboard Shortcut
The Charts American ENC NOAA charts. The chart advises OpenCPN what symbols to be used and where to put them. Inspecting the chart usually yields the answer. For example At blake island the entry to the marina is coded as ObjectClass:
Beacon, lateral Acronym: BCNLAT Where as Buoy, lateral Acronym: BOYLAT
This is the common way for a chartmaker to code the chart.
Also at Blake island the topmarks are coded as
Daymark Acronym: DAYMAR while the common way is: Topmark Acronym: TOPMAR
What you see is the way the chartmaker intended it, or the chartmaker was an apprentice wo messed things up.
Answer: Using Options → Charts → Vector Charts this is the correct display when using “Simplified” chart feature display. If you switch to “Paper Chart” feature display, you will see the more familiar images for the topmarks.
See Use-seaclear-wci-charts and Oziexplorer to Opencpn Also see Not supported formats that can be converted and Map2Kap and WCI Charts